Nexus: Ziva Payvan Book 2 (9 page)

-20-

HSP Headquarters

Noro, Haphez

 

Noro was just beginning to rise over the crest of the hills that surrounded the city of the same name. Diago Dasaro turned away from the window, interested in anything but the sunrise, and watched Nejdra Venn and Kyron Hoxie enter the situation room. Judging by the general demeanor of the two captains, they’d had little or no rest overnight and the hunt for Payvan hadn’t yielded any results. After dragging through a sleepless night himself, Dasaro’s patience was running thinner than ever and he let out a deep breath in the form of a growl.

“Nothing!” Nejdra exclaimed as she came to a standstill at the table. “It’s unbelievable. Absolutely nothing!”

“The trail is still cold at the checkpoint,” Hoxie said, elaborating on his associate’s outburst. “The homing beacon on the missing bike has been effectively disabled and there’s still no sign of the officer it was registered to. We’ve been unable to pick up a signal from his communicator.”

Nejdra rested her hands on her hips, her face twisted with fury. “You’re sure we’re not just dealing with a deserter there? Do we know for sure Payvan even
took
the bike?”

“There were footprints found around the camp that matched those discovered at the crash site,” Hoxie explained.

“And what of the crash survivor?” Dasaro snarled in Nejdra’s direction. She’d been responsible for that sphere of the investigation. “Agent Spence.”

“He was released from the Severe Cases Center in Haphor late last night,” the woman replied. “They’ve got him under observation at a local med center now, and they say he’ll be ready for questioning later this morning. But get this – he’s already claiming
Payvan
is the one who pulled him out of that car.”

“Well,” Dasaro muttered, “we can’t have that now, can we?”

“It’s probably true,” she said with a shrug. “And if it is, she saved the man’s life. With that injury, he wouldn’t have lasted long in the position he was in.”

Dasaro eyed her warily. “It still needs to be dealt with.”

“We’ll head over there soon and take care of it,” Hoxie assured him.

Dasaro looked out the window again and blinked against the sun, which was by now casting golden light across the city. “Tracking Payvan down is going to take time. Until then, we can’t let her have anything.” He looked up at the other two captains. “Ruin her.”

-21-

Residential Sector

Noro, Haphez

 

Dust swirled around her with each breath she took. The window of the abandoned house was covered in such a thick layer of grime Ziva could barely see out of it. It hardly mattered however, because no one outside could see her concealed in the shadows within. She didn’t need a crystal-clear picture of the street either – only a general view of the shapes that passed by, particularly any that entered or exited the house across the way.

The first light of dawn had been visible by the time she’d made it back to her hoverbike at the relay station. She’d pushed the machine to its limits, reaching Noro in a bit less time than it had taken the prisoner transport to travel to Haphor. Upon arriving in the city, she’d gone immediately to a street bazaar where she’d purchased an unregistered communicator and a new pair of boots from behind the cover of her helmet. After dumping her old footwear and the stolen comm unit into the river, she’d maneuvered back into the residential area of the city where she’d found this house exactly as she remembered it. Energy depleted, she was grateful for the opportunity to sit down and rest after yet another miserably long night.

She noted the time. After two hours of watching and waiting, she concluded it was safe to approach. Unfolding her legs, she rose to her feet and removed her helmet from where she’d set it on what had once been a kitchen counter. She hesitated for a moment before opening the door and surveyed the trail she had left. There was a clear semi-circle on the floor where she’d been sitting, and there was an abundance of well-defined footprints coming from where she’d broken in through the back window. No matter. In the improbable case that someone searched this dilapidated little house, such marks couldn’t be traced back to her.

Tugging the helmet down over her head, Ziva opened the door and stepped out onto the street. It was a relatively peaceful neighborhood, with little foot traffic but moderately busy streets. She waited for a lull between two groundcars then jogged across, using the cover of the helmet visor to keep an eye out for approaching HSP vehicles. Seeing none, she focused her attention on the door of the house, probing the locking mechanism with her mind just as she’d tried to do at the relay station. To her surprise, it was already open. Without faltering, she hopped up the two short steps and let herself in as if it were her own home.

The interior was darker than she had expected; the windows were almost fully tinted and there was no other source of light that Ziva could immediately see. She removed the helmet and stood there blinking for several seconds, then took a step further inside.

While she had only been in this place on one other occasion, Ziva remembered it well enough to realize something drastic had happened since then. The simple, well-kept bachelor pad had been transformed into a place that would have been better suited to a mob world like Niio or the slums on Chaiavis. Empty liquor bottles and other trash littered the kitchen table as well as the living room’s center table, and the air was thick as if someone had recently been smoking govino. Other than a bizarre insect attempting to drag a piece of rotten food across the floor, there was no sign of life.

Ziva set her helmet down on the center table and gazed at the sofa where she had sat the last time she was there. The data pads she had read were gathering dust on the shelf from which she had once taken them. She made her way into the kitchen, which was in the worst shape by far. Soiled dishes and utensils, as well as more foul food, joined the liquor bottles on the counter and in the sink. Water dripped from the leaky faucet with a steady
clink clink clink.
Ziva went to the cooler and found it to be nearly empty except for a couple of unopened drinks and some containers of unidentifiable leftovers. She could feel the corners of her mouth turning further and further downward the more she discovered, and she hadn’t even been down the hall.

Ziva froze. The floor had creaked somewhere in the house, ever so slightly. She held her breath and listened, picking up the sound of feet – probably bare – moving cautiously across the carpet in the hallway. She was not alone.

In one deft movement, she drew her pistol and reached the archway that led back into the living room. The footsteps stopped, their owner having no doubt heard her. She raised the pistol over her head and exhaled slowly through her nose; the person on the other side of the wall did the same.

Ziva jumped out into the hallway at the exact moment the man came at her. The first thing she saw was his pistol leveled at her head and she immediately went for it as he lunged toward hers. She struggled against his muscular arm, angling his weapon upward just as it discharged. Ziva flung his arms across each other and pivoted, catching him hard in the face with the back of her head before leaping backward, sending him staggering back against the wall. She whirled, pinning him there with one hand closed around his throat and the other pressing her pistol to his forehead. He held his hands up in surrender and let his gun fall to the floor.

“I must say that wasn’t much of a welcome,” she said.

Aroska Tarbic turned his head away from the barrel of her pistol, squinting at her in the dim light. “Ziva?” he muttered. “What the hell are you doing here?”

She released him and took a step back. “I’ve been good, thanks for asking, but I don’t think I can say the same about you.” She took a moment to survey the mess around her again. “What happened here?”

He recovered his pistol and went to set it on the dining table. The first thing that came to Ziva’s mind was that he looked like one of the Solaris junkies he’d worked with during his stint in the SCU. Dark circles enveloped his drooping eyes, and he had an all-around greasy look to him as if he hadn’t bathed in at least a few days. His shaggy black hair was loose from the neat ponytail Ziva remembered him wearing, and a very unshaven face completed his ragged appearance. A stale scent hung about him, confirming her suspicion that he’d been smoking.

“Can’t a man have a few drinks?” he retorted.

Ziva crossed her arms. “I think there’s a little more to it than that.”

“I doubt you came here to criticize my personal habits. What do you want?”

“It seems I’m in a bit of trouble.”

“Oh? I wouldn’t know – viewscreen’s been down for two weeks.”

Ziva filled him in on the basics, which at this point consisted of being wanted for murder and escaping. Aroska appeared to be listening for the most part, but he was clearly hung over, still smashed, maybe high, or perhaps a vicious combination of the three. She’d caught a glimpse of his peculiar drinking and drug habits before, but
this
was extreme; she couldn’t even begin to fathom what had caused the severe change in lifestyle. Strangely enough, the two of them had neither seen nor spoken to each other since he had come to her home nearly two months earlier to inform her that Emeri Arion had revoked the order to terminate her life.

“Now, tell me what’s going on with you,” she said again when she had finished.

“It’s not your problem.”

“It
is
my problem if you’re going to be helping me.”

He scoffed. “Who said anything about helping you?” He was quiet for a moment, realizing he had been rather harsh, and tried again. “Why come to me?”

“Aroska, you know I’m not one to ask for help, and you know
you’re
probably one of the last people I would ever ask for help. The fact that I’m here now asking has to tell you
something
.”

He shook his head. “You of all people should have more than enough resources for a time like this. What can I do that no one else can?”

As Ziva searched for a place to even begin, the stench and grittiness of her skin and clothing suddenly overtook her. “You can start by letting me use your shower.”

 

-22-

Tarbic Residence

Noro, Haphez

 

Ziva slid the lavatory door shut and made sure the lock was securely engaged. Slipping out of her newly acquired boots, she stepped into the shower fully clothed. One by one, she peeled the filthy garments off and watched the muddy water swirl down the drain. She took the time to scrub and rinse each item before throwing them over the shower wall to dry.

The warm shower felt heavenly compared to the chilly rain she’d grown accustomed to over the past day and night, and for a moment Ziva closed her eyes. Never in a million years had she imagined she’d ever be present in Aroska Tarbic’s home again, much less bathing of all things. Even seeing him again seemed odd – they’d parted on what had seemed like pleasant terms but had both allowed each other to fade into the background. She thought back to the moment she had offered him a special ops position as the two of them stood in her home. In all reality she didn’t know what she would have done if he’d accepted – the suggestion had been more of a filler for a conversation that had been growing rather…
delicate
.

Life had virtually returned to normal after that day. She’d endured two weeks of unpaid disciplinary probation during which she’d been able to rest and allow her wounds to heal. The fall of Dakiti and Dane Bothum had crippled Solaris to the point that HSP’s clean-up crews hadn’t had much work to do when it came to permanently disbanding the radical group. Ziva had seen Aroska’s name listed on agency bulletins as a primary contributor to the effort, and there’d been a short internal investigation into his relationship with the treacherous Saun Zaid, but nothing more. The only other thing she knew was that he was still receiving a paycheck from HSP.

She couldn’t help but feel that his newly discovered alcohol and drug problems were somehow her fault, but she dismissed the thought as foolish and continued picking leaves and twigs out of her hair. She wasn’t about to let anyone blame her for anything else at this point.

While exploring her scalp, Ziva’s fingers encountered the gash she had sustained when the aircar crashed. The hair around it was caked with dried blood, which she carefully began to rinse away. The wound stung when the water contacted it, as did the rest of the small scrapes and cuts that were the result of broken glass and hours of climbing and crawling through the forest. On the bright side, the warm water helped alleviate some of the discomfort in her shoulder, and the caura she’d injected the previous night seemed to be doing its job on her ribs. She scrubbed at the tender area gently, unable to differentiate between the dirt and the bruising. Mud and gunk had found its way into every possible nook and cranny, so she spent another couple of minutes doing a thorough rinse before allowing herself a few moments to just stand still under the scalding water.

Had HSP really thought it would be so easy to take her down, or was she missing something? It would benefit her to know what they knew, what direction the investigation was headed. Contacting Skeet or Zinni was out of the question; hell, contacting
anybody
was out of the question! She needed someone she could send in to gather the facts, someone who wouldn’t be recognized as her emissary. A sudden thought struck her.

Wishing she didn’t have to return to reality, Ziva reluctantly shut the water off and stepped out. Steam swirled around her as she dried quickly and pulled on the clothes Aroska had put out for her, a set of loose-fitting loungewear that had apparently belonged to a former girlfriend. She wondered briefly if the garments had belonged to Saun, though she doubted he would have kept them if that were the case. Regardless of whose they were, she was grateful for something clean and dry to wear. Aside from her undergarments, the only item of her own that she took was the therapeutic knee sleeve she’d been forced to wear since Aroska himself had shot her. She wrung it out and pulled it on.

When she ventured out into the hall, Ziva was pleasantly surprised to find that the windows had been brightened and some of the old bottles had been cleared away. The rug still felt grimy under her bare feet, but she was pleased to already be seeing improvements.

She found Aroska in the kitchen, scrubbing weeks’ worth of slime from the table. The trash compactor was standing open, full to the brim with the old bottles and dishes that had probably been ruined by the spoiled food. The only item that occupied the counter now was a small tray that held a stick of govino. A fine column of smoke rose from the end that glowed orange.

Ziva took another few moments to study the man as she took up a position against the wall where she’d stood the first time they’d officially talked. Aroska continued cleaning, aware he was under observation but apparently not caring. He was still a large man, but he had lost a noticeable amount of weight, no doubt due to this depression he seemed to have fallen into. When combined with the changes in his hair and face, he was hardly the same person she had come to know two months earlier.

Presently he finished cleaning and tossed the cloth into the sink. He pulled out one of the dining chairs and motioned for Ziva to take a seat before sliding around to the other side of the table. “I suppose we have a lot to talk about.”

Ziva took the chair and watched as Aroska transferred the little tray over to the table. He lifted the half-smoked govino stick to his lips and took a long drag from it, holding the smoke in his mouth for a moment before turning slightly and exhaling it through his nose. He gazed at her through the cloud of smoke, waiting for her to begin.

First things first – she held out her hand. “Let me see that.”

Aroska glanced quizzically from her hand to the govino stick then handed it over, placing it between her middle and forefinger. For a moment Ziva was tempted to take a puff herself, but instead she flipped it over and snuffed it out on the table before snapping the remainder of the stick in half.

Tarbic’s only reaction was a wag of his head as he leaned back in the chair and drummed his fingers on the table. “You have to make this as difficult as possible, don’t you?”

Ziva shrugged and drew one leg up against her, casually wrapping her arms around her knee. “I think you’ll find that when someone chooses to make my life miserable, I can’t help but return the favor to anyone unfortunate enough to be nearby.”

“That’s an interesting strategy when it comes to asking someone for help.”

“Put yourself in my shoes, Aroska. How would you feel if the one person you could ask for help was too strung out and screwed up to do anything?”

“Why me, then?” he demanded.

“For starters, you know my secret.”

Aroska sighed and hung his head, combing his fingers through his stringy hair. After a moment he placed his hands on the table and eyed her with bloodshot eyes. “Start from the beginning,” he said.

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